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Lombardi’s Way - A column from the 24×7 founder that focuses on the Ravens, the NFL, Baltimore, the world of sports or life’s inspirations.

Battle Plans - During the season, you can expect to find thoughtful analysis in each of our Game Previews. We bring out the chalk and then talk X’s and O’s. In the offseason, Dev Panchwagh — The Scientist, digs beneath the surface and serves up insightful commentary on issues facing the Ravens and the NFL. School is in session!

According to Aaron Wilson of the Baltimore Sun, the Ravens will have a “Year One Rookie Allocation” of $5.517M. This is the team’s “rookie cap” (as it was referred to prior to the 2011 CBA) and encompasses the 2013 Cap numbers of the Ravens’ 10 draft picks.

Once signed, the estimated Cap number for each player is as follows:

Matt Elam: $1.23M

Arthur Brown: $646K

Brandon Williams: $534K

John Simon: $502K

Kyle Juszczyk: $480K

Ricky Wagner: $441K

Kapron Lewis-Moore: $427K

Ryan Jensen: $425K

Aaron Mellette: $416K

Marc Anthony: $416K

Under the Rule of 51 that applies at this time of the year, only the Cap numbers of those players that fall amongst the team’s top 51 Cap numbers will count against the team’s overall Cap at this time of the offseason.

Presently, the bottom 5 Cap numbers for the Ravens are:

47: $504K

48: $491K

49: $480K

50: $480K

51: $480K

As you can see, many of the draft picks will not count amongst the top 51. So, while the team will need to fit all 10 of the draft picks into its $5.517M Rookie Cap, it will not need $5.517M in overall Cap space to accommodate the signing of all of its draft picks.

So, based on the above numbers, only the first four (4) picks will have Cap numbers of greater than $491K, which is the team’s 48th highest Cap number. As such, only those four will be part of the top 51 and, under the Rule of 51, will replace the Cap numbers of the players who are currently 48th-51st on the team’s Cap. Only the bonus prorations for the players who are removed will remain to count against the Salary Cap.

The remaining six (6) draft picks would not count amongst the top 51 Cap numbers, so the base salaries of those players, while counting against the Rookie Cap, will not count against the team’s overall Salary Cap. So, for those draft picks that land outside of the top 51, only the player’s 2013 signing bonus proration will count.

So, to calculate the exact impact of the Rookie Cap on the team’s overall Cap, the amount of the base salaries -$405K – for each of the lower 6 draft picks (totally $2.43M) can be deducted from the overall number of $5.517M. Then, for the top four draft picks, while their Cap numbers do count against the overall Cap (by virtue of being part of the top 51 Cap numbers), they replace the four players who were formerly part of the top 51, so the base salaries ($480K) of the four being removed (totaling $1.92M) will be deducted from the team’s overall Cap.

When those two numbers ($2.43M and $1.92M) are deducted from the team’s Rookie Cap ($5.517M), the true impact of the signing of the team’s rookies – $1.167M – is revealed.

For a more thorough explanation of how the rookie Cap works, click here.

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About Brian McFarland

Known on Ravens Message Boards as "B-more Ravor", Brian is a life-long Baltimorean and an avid fan of the Ravens and all Baltimore sports. A PSL holder since 1998, Brian has garnered a reputation as a cap-guru because of his strange (actually warped) desire to wade through the intricacies of the NFL's salary cap and actually make sense of it for those of us who view it as inviting as IRS Tax Code.
Brian, who hails from Catonsville, MD and still resides there, is married and has two children. More from Brian McFarland

2+ Comments TonyLombardi says Dusty728 Thanks Dusty. That is an article that deserves its own space. Maybe we can get someone to give a behind the scenes account of the great William Donald 17 hours ago

Filmstudy - Filmstudy is a sophisticated and comprehensive statistical analysis of the Ravens defense that incorporates a participation-by-play tracking system. This unique analysis is the brain child of the author and provides our readers with the real story behind the Ravens’ top end defensive results in the National Football League. Make Russellstreetreport.com the source for all of your Ravens football news and the forum to talk about what the Ravens fans want to hear most.

Lombardi’s Way - A column from the 24×7 founder that focuses on the Ravens, the NFL, Baltimore, the world of sports or life’s inspirations.

Battle Plans - During the season, you can expect to find thoughtful analysis in each of our Game Previews. We bring out the chalk and then talk X’s and O’s. In the offseason, Dev Panchwagh — The Scientist, digs beneath the surface and serves up insightful commentary on issues facing the Ravens and the NFL. School is in session!